Key Takeaways:
- Wall Street consensus for Tesla Q2 deliveries stands at 406,024 vehicles
- Goldman Sachs raised its estimate to 420,000, citing strong Europe and China data
- A beat above 406,000 would mark back-to-back quarters of year-over-year growth
Key Takeaways:

Tesla faces a make-or-break delivery test on July 2, with Wall Street's consensus at 406,024 vehicles and at least two major banks calling for a beat that could reverse the stock's 17% year-to-date decline.
"The data supports a beat," Mark Delaney, analyst at Goldman Sachs, said. He raised his Q2 delivery estimate to 420,000 from 405,000, citing European registrations up roughly 85% to 90% year-over-year through May and high single-digit growth in China.
The 406,024 consensus, compiled by Tesla from 22 sell-side estimates, includes 392,625 Model 3 and Model Y units and 12,978 other vehicles. Goldman's 420,000 call and Barclays' 418,000 forecast both sit well above the median of 408,609. RBC Capital's Tom Narayan projects 405,000 with an Outperform rating and a $475 price target, while Baird's 392,900 estimate is the most conservative among bulge-bracket firms despite an Outperform rating and a $522 target.
A delivery print at or above 406,000 would give Tesla back-to-back quarters of year-over-year growth after two years of annual declines. The company delivered 384,122 vehicles in Q2 2025, down 14% from the prior year, and 358,023 in Q1 2026 — a quarter where production of 408,386 left more than 50,000 vehicles in unsold inventory. Meeting the consensus would signal that overhang is clearing. A miss below 390,000 would suggest the gap is widening.
The stakes extend beyond the delivery number. Tesla's full-year 2026 consensus of 1,654,808 vehicles implies barely 1% growth from 2025's 1,636,129, and that figure has already been trimmed by about 35,000 units since March. Energy storage deployments, expected to reach 13.8 GWh for a 36% sequential increase, will not be detailed until the July 22 earnings call, when investors will also look for updates on automotive gross margins and Cybercab production timelines.
For TSLA holders, a beat above 406,000 would provide the most credible demand recovery signal since the slump began, though Goldman's Neutral rating and $375 price target suggest the stock is already pricing in a recovery. The next catalyst after the delivery print is the July 22 earnings call, where margin data and Robotaxi progress will determine whether the narrative shift holds.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.